What I don't like is people spouting about Godel's theorem without knowing what it is. If you're not up to finding out what Godel's theorem is then at least be up to saying so — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't see Godel's ideas as consistent with finding THE truth — Gregory
Indeed, that's a generalisation of the first theorem. In a given formal system complex enough to do arithmetic there are statements which can neither be proved nor disproved. Assuming the system is consistent (surely not an unreasonable thing to do?) then it must be incomplete - it must contain unproven statement.Gödel offered a proof that math is either inconsistent or incomplete — Gregory
Can it (some unprovable proposition) be *understood* intuitively like axioms are and be taken as axioms? — Gregory
Gödel offered a proof that math is either inconsistent or incomplete and that the dilemma is undecidable. — Gregory
Gödel was trying to find a way to make a line in between what can be known and what can not
— Gregory
Where did you read that? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Gödel was trying to find a way to make a line in between what can be known and what can not — Gregory
why haven't you written a couple paragraphs here saying what Gödel really did — Gregory
I don't believe in self reference in math or logic — Gregory
Imagine some unprovable proposition. Can it be *understood* intuitively like axioms are and be taken as axioms? — Gregory
But [Russell's] paradox is false. — Gregory
A set containing itself is just bizarre — Gregory
What I said about Gödel was based on what the majority of people have said — Gregory
Someone needs a really good background in math to read his actual papers — Gregory
so most of us are getting our ideas from second hand sources — Gregory
you can't prove that a set can contain itself from math itself — Gregory
so rejecting Russell's paradox is a good way to start in approaching Godel. A set containing itself IS self reference — Gregory
I don't believe in self reference in math or logic
— Gregory
You don't know the actual nature of the "self-reference" in Godel's proof. The proof may be formulated in finite combinatorial arithmetic. If you have a problem with the proof, then you have a problem with finite combinatorial arithmetic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
even for you Gödel's theorem is hard to put into words — Gregory
If a theory T is a consistent, recursively axiomatizable extension of Robinson arithmetic, then there is a sentence G in the language for T such that neither G nor ~G is a theorem of T. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If P is a closed formula, then there is a system S such that P is an axiom for S. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If a theory T is a consistent, recursively axiomatizable extension of Robinson arithmetic, then there is a sentence G in the language for T such that neither G nor ~G is a theorem of T. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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